Campus Reopened

The campus will be open for classes and all other business Monday, Nov. 19 and Tuesday, Nov. 20 with a regular employee workday and faculty duty day (no classes scheduled) on Wednesday, Nov. 21. Updates at go.sjsu.edu/air.

Sexual Misconduct: All sexual activity between members of the CSU community must be
based on affirmative consent. Engaging in any sexual activity without first obtaining
affirmative consent to the specific activity is sexual misconduct, whether or not
the conduct violates any civil or criminal law.

Executive Order 1096 (Systemwide Policy Prohibiting Discrimination, Harassment, Retaliation,
Sexual Misconduct, Dating and Domestic Violence, and Stalking Against Employees and
Third Parties and Procedure for Addressing Such Complaints by Employees and Third
Parties); Executive Order 1097 (Systemwide Policy Prohibiting Discrimination, Harassment,
Retaliation, Sexual Misconduct, Dating and Domestic Violence, and Stalking Against
Students and Systemwide Procedure for Addressing Such Complaints by Students);

Sexual activity includes, but is not limited to, kissing, touching intimate body parts,
fondling, intercourse, penetration of any body part, and oral sex. It also includes
any unwelcome physical sexual acts, such as unwelcome sexual touching, sexual assault,
sexual battery, rape, and dating violence. When it is based on gender, domestic violence
and stalking also constitute sexual misconduct. Sexual misconduct may include physical
force, violence, threat, or intimidation, ignoring the objections of the other person,
causing the other person’s intoxication or incapacitation through the use of drugs
or alcohol, or taking advantage of the other person’s incapacitation (including voluntary
intoxication). Men as well as women can be victims of these forms of sexual misconduct.
Sexual activity with a minor is never consensual when the Complainant is under 18
years old, because the minor is considered incapable of giving legal consent due to
age.

Sexual Assault is a form of sexual misconduct and is an attempt, coupled with the
ability, to commit a violent injury on the person of another because of that person’s
gender or sex.

Sexual Battery is a form of sexual misconduct and is any willful and unlawful use
of force or violence upon the person of another because of that person’s gender or
sex as well as touching an intimate part of another person against that person’s will
and for the purpose of sexual arousal, gratification, or abuse.

Rape is a form of sexual misconduct and is non-consensual sexual intercourse that
may also involve the use of threat of force, violence, or immediate and unlawful bodily
injury or threats of future retaliation and duress. Any sexual penetration, however
slight, is sufficient to constitute rape. Sexual acts including intercourse are considered
non- consensual when a person is incapable of giving consent because s/he is incapacitated
from alcohol and/or drugs, is under 18 years old, or if a mental disorder or developmental
or physical disability renders a person incapable of giving consent. The Respondent’s
relationship to the person (such as family member, spouse, friend, acquaintance or
stranger) is irrelevant. (See complete definition of affirmative consent below.)

Acquaintance Rape is a form of sexual misconduct committed by an individual known
to the victim. This includes a person the victim may have just met; i.e., at a party,
introduced through a friend, or on a social networking website. (See definition
of Rape.)